Season 3: Invincible -

For the first time, Mark isn't the pawn. He’s the player.

You can’t save everyone. But you have to try. This story leans into the core of Invincible : the deconstruction of the superhero myth, the horror of power without wisdom, and the radical, painful choice to be kind in an unkind universe.

He lets her punch him. He lets the blow crack his ribs. And as she rears back for the killing strike, he whispers, “I’m not my father.” Invincible - Season 3

“Curious,” Thragg rumbles. “He fights like a Viltrumite. But he has the heart of a human.”

Mark’s response is terrifyingly calm. “I know. I’ve known since Season 2. I let him think it worked.” For the first time, Mark isn't the pawn

The finale opens with a trial. Not for Anissa—for Mark. The world’s governments, terrified of a rogue Viltrumite with a conscience, demand he submit to global oversight. Cecil offers him a deal: become Earth’s official, controlled weapon.

Mark arrives alone.

Deep space. A massive Viltrumite war fleet, hundreds strong, drops out of faster-than-light travel. At its head is Thragg , the scarred, feral emperor of the Viltrumites. He looks at a hologram of Mark holding Anissa, refusing to kill her.